Title: Improving Patient Identification Skills in Long Term Care
1- Improving Patient Identification Skills in Long
Term Care - Linda Barboa, PhD., CCC, SLP
- Missouri State University
- Springfield, Missouri
2Speech Therapy Skilled Interventions
- Diet texture analysis
- Trial feedings
- Dysphagia Management
- Pre-feeding skills
- Oral/pharyngeal strengthening
- Oral/pharyngeal desensitization
- Thermal stimulation
- Oral/pharyngeal stimulation
- Motor speech training
- Dysarthria-Breathing coordination/ strength/ type
- Dysarthria-Pitch variation
- Prosody
- Thought organization
- Apraxia-Sounds/syllable/word/phrase imitation
- Apraxia-Automatic speech
- Oral/pharyngeal coordination training
- Oral sensitivity training
- Auditory comprehension activities
3Speech Therapy Skilled Interventions (contd)
- Pragmatics
- Dysarthria Oral motor strengthening
- Dysarthria Pacing
- Dysarthria Contrastive stress
- Dysarthria Oral pressure exercises
- Dysarthria Oral motor coordination
- Dysarthria vocal intensity variation
- Dysarthria Deep breathing
- Apraxia Contrastive stress drills
- Apraxia Phrase/ sentence completion
- Apraxia Placement/manner of production
education - Apraxia Sound sequencing
- Compensatory strategy education
- Aphasia management
- Dysphasia management
- Reading comprehension activities
- Evaluation of Speech
- Evaluation of Swallow
- Memory Techniques
- Task Segmentation
- Task sequencing
- Orientation to people, place, time
- Safety Judgment
- Home Safety management
- Home Education Program
- Agraphia Management
- Fluency
- Tongue Thrust
- Language Development
4Speech Therapy Skilled Interventions (cont)
- Cognitive/ Linguistic management
- Equipment adaptation
- Dementia Management
- Auditory Memory
- Auditory Training
- Auditory Perception
- Auditory Discrimination
- Auditory Memory
- Personal Decision Making
- Aphonia
- Dysphonia
- Vocal Resonance
- Vocal Abuse
- Verbal expression activities
- Verbal reasoning
- Laryngectomy management
- Tracheotomy management
- Augmentative Communication
- Aural Rehab
- Oral Hygiene Management
- Self Medication Management
- Positioning for feeding/ breathing
- Elimination of oral reflexes
- Trans. tube to oral feeding
- Telling Time
- Numerical Concepts
- Money Management
- Telephone skills
- Following directions
5Screening Rationale
- Improves patient function and outcomes.
- Enhances SLP partnership with facility.
- Increases SLP satisfaction through a varied
caseload.
6Screening Responsibility
- The Speech-Language Pathologist will
- Screen routinely and timely.
- Develop communication with facility personnel to
identify patients at risk. - Educate facility staff to the role and benefit of
Speech-Language and Swallowing services.
7The Speech-Language Pathologist will screen
- New admissions
- Readmissions
- Quarterly with care plans
- Change of status assessments
- Facility Referrals
- Incident reports
- Quality Indicator Report
- All patients recently admitted from the hospital
who do not come with therapy orders.
8Screening Steps
- First, Scan the medical chart.
- Second, briefly interview and observe the
resident. - Third, ask the facility staff or the residents
family if there have been any changes noticed in
residents abilities.
9Scanning the Medical Chart
- Admission or face sheet
- Physicians notes or history and physical
- Acute rehabilitation progress notes
- Nursing assessment
- Physician order sheet (therapy orders might
already be included) - Patient care plan
- Discharge plan
10Medical Chart Reviewfor Indication of
Speech-Language/ Swallow Evaluation
- Prior level of function
- Hospitalization
- Past medical history
- Previous rehabilitation services (this does not
rule out additional therapy!) - Current status
- Potential to improve function or quality of life.
11What to look for when you screen
- Improvements, or Declines.
- Improvements-the patient might be able to
tolerate more therapy, for a longer period of
time, and achieve a higher level of function. - Declines- rehabilitation could get the patient
back to the prior level of function, and prevent
further declines.
12Signals of Change
- Common changes in function which signal the need
for an SLP evaluation are - Weight loss, diet change or swallow problems
- Change in cognitive status
- Change in social interaction
- Change in speech or comprehension
- Change in hearing
- Pressure ulcers combined with weight loss or
dietary issues.
13Screening Tips
- Stop the screening and request an evaluation if
- There is any indication that a problem exists.
- If the screening is taking too long to complete
due to the residents special needs. - If you feel the need to try some hands on
assessment. - If you feel that you could make suggestions to
improve this patients quality of life as related
to your discipline. - If the screening is becoming too comprehensive.
14The Most Successful Screening Program
- .
- SLP advocates for optimal functioning of the
resident. - SLP screens to identify the changing needs of the
residents. - SLP ensures compliance with state and federal
guidelines.
15Available Tools for Identifying Patient Needs
- Nursing Notes
- Doctors orders
- Physicians progress notes
- RAP
- Medication treatment sheets
- Resident Care Plans
16- Skin Integrity Lists
- Weight Loss Lists
- Fall Lists
- Dietary Notes
- Interviews with staff/ family/ doc.
- Incident reports
17Why Improve Your Patient Identification Skills?
- 1. Every SLP in Long Term Care is clearly
responsible for high quality services to our
patients and to our customers. - 2. It is the job you were hired to do.
18Analysis of Referral Patterns
- New Admit screenings
- Care Plan screenings
- Incidents
- Nursing referral
- Family referral
- Patient self referral
- Social services
- Dietary
- Activities
- Other therapists
- Doctors
- Others (specify)
19Inservices
- Educate facility staff WHAT we do
- Educate facility staff about WHO to refer to SLP
20Consider all essential SLP programs in your SNF
-
- Rehab Dining
- Skin Integrity
- Dementia
21Caseload Mix Opportunities
- Look at your caseload patterns from the ICD 9
code analysis. Consider all of the ICD9 Codes in
your discipline.
22Your Professional Development
- List what you have done in the past month to
increase your expertise so that you can better
serve your patients - Professional Books read
- Professional Articles read
- Topics researched on Internet
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